Toshiko Akiyoshi (born 12 December 1929) is a Japanese jazz pianist, composer, arranger, and bandleader who has cemented her place as one of the most important jazz musicians of the twentieth century.
Toshiko Akiyoshi was born in Darien, Manchuria. Historically an area of China, many world powers fought to control Manchuria during the twentieth century. From 1932-1945, the Japanese held Manchuria under colonial control. At the end of World War II, the Japanese in Manchuria, including Akiyoshi’s family, were forced out.
The family moved back to occupied Japan, where they experienced the hardships of postwar life. In an interview, Akiyoshi noted that when the family came back, her “parents lost everything.” While Akiyoshi had been able to play piano in Manchuria, her parents were now unable to provide her with an instrument. Since Japan was still under occupation, there were many clubs that catered to both soldiers and the local community. The clubs needed musicians to entertain not only the foreign troops but the Japanese who wanted to dance and listen to music. To keep playing piano, the teenaged Akiyoshi got her first job playing in the clubs and in small combos. By 1951, she was playing piano professionally and leading her own jazz group. In 1952, pianist Oscar Peterson discovered Akiyoshi while he was on a Jazz at the Philharmonic tour of Japan. After hearing her play in a Tokyo nightclub, Peterson persuaded producer Norman Granz to record her on his Verve label. This recording became Akiyoshi’s big break. After this opportunity, Akiyoshi came to the United States in 1956 to begin studying at the Berklee School of Music in Boston. With her enrollment, she became the first Japanese musician at the school.
In 1959, she moved to New York City and established a reputation as a fine “bebop” (a style of jazz popularized in the 1940s in the U.S.) player. She played in clubs such as Birdland, Village Gate, Five Spot, and Half Note. She remembered facing discrimination in the jazz world because she was a woman and Asian. In an interview, Akiyoshi recalled hearing people ask “’Japanese play jazz, really?’” and, when it came to her being female, she described it as a “‘Really, really?’ kind of thing.’”
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| Charlie Mariano |
In 1959, she also married her first husband, saxophonist Charlie Mariano; the two formed a quartet. In the 1960s, Akiyoshi continued making her mark on the jazz world. She began showing her talent as a composer-arranger for big bands and worked with Charles Mingus in 1962.
By 1973, Akiyoshi had moved to Los Angelas with her second husband, saxophonist, and flutist Lew Tabackin. That same year, Akiyoshi formed her first jazz orchestra—the Toshiko Akiyoshi Jazz Orchestra. Tabackin, who was playing with The Tonight Show band, helped fill the 16-piece orchestra with some of the best studio musicians in town.
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| Lew Tabackin |
The Toshiko Akiyoshi Jazz Orchestra went on to have great success, winning the DownBeat Critic’s Poll and best jazz album of the year for Long Yellow Road by Stereo Review in 1976. Akiyoshi also began to branch out musically. Since all of the saxophone players could also play flute, Akiyoshi thought she could write a woodwind section for the band. In the 1970s, she also began introducing Japanese themes and instruments into her compositions and arrangements. All became her trademarks.
In 1982, Akiyoshi and her husband moved back to New York and restarted their band with New York musicians. They continued to enjoy critical success. The band debuted at Carnegie Hall as part of the 1983 Kool Jazz Festival and went on to record 22 albums and receive 14 Grammy nominations. Akiyoshi became the first woman to place first in the Best Arranger and Composer category in the DownBeat Readers’ Poll. Among her other notable honors are the Shijahosho (1999, from the Emperor of Japan); the Japan Foundation Award, Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosetta (2004, from the Emperor of Japan); the Asahi Award (2005, from the Asahi Shimbun newspaper); and NEA Jazz master, American jazz’s highest honor (2007). Her autobiography, Life with Jazz (1996), is in its fifth printing in Japanese. In 2003, Akiyoshi disbanded her orchestra to focus on piano. She said in an interview, “it has been 60 years since I discovered jazz and made it my lifetime work. I am so gratified to be recognized for my endeavors especially my infusing of Japanese culture into the jazz world, making it ever more universal.”Today in her mid 90’s she is still actively touring with recent mentions from 2024 and 2025 highlighting her continued presence in the jazz scene.
(Edited from National Women’s History Museum article)



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2 comments:
For “Toshiko Akiyoshi – Toshiko's Blues - Quartet & Trios 1953-1958 (2023 Fresh Sound)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/Gaezsbbf
Toshiko Akiyoshi Quartet - Tokyo 1953
1-1 What Is This Thing Called Loved? 2:46
1-2 Gone With The Wind 2:34
1-3 I Want To Be Happy 2:14
1-4 Toshiko's Blues 3:43
1-5 Shadrack 2:41
1-6 Solidado 3:29
1-7 Squatty Roo 2:39
1-8 Laura 3:29
Toshiko Akiyoshi Trio - Boston 1956
1-9 Between My And Myself 5:14
1-10 It Could Happen To You 3:59
1-11 Kyo Shu (Nostalgia) 3:40
1-12 Homework 3:38
1-13 Manhattan Adress 2:44
1-14 Softly As In A Sunrise Morning 4:06
1-15 Soshu Yayoku (Suzhou Serenadde) 1:43
1-16 Sunday Afternoon 4:18
1-17 Blues For Toshiko 5:17
Toshiko Akiyoshi Trio - New York City 1956
1-18 No Moon At All 5:00
1-19 Pea, Bee And Lee 3:20
1-20 Thou Swell 5:05
Toshiko Akiyoshi Trio - Live At The Newport Jazz Festival 1957
2-1 Between My And Myself 5:49
2-2 Blues For Toshiko 5:14
2-3 I'll Remember April 7:04
2-4 Lover 5:16
Toshiko Akiyoshi Trio - New York City 1957
2-5 The Man I Love 5:27
2-6 Minor Mood 4:16
2-7 After You've Gone 3:34
2-8 We´ll Be Together Again 4:29
2-9 Tosh's Fantasy: Down A Mountain/ Phrygian Waterfall/ Runninng Stream 9:02
2-10 Bag's Groove 6:48
2-11 Imagination 3:35
2-12 Studio J 3:17
Toshiko Akiyoshi Trio - Live At "The Suject Is Jazz" TV-Show 1958
2-13 The 3rd Movement 1:46
2-14 Don't Get Around Much Anymore 3:02
Bass – Eddie Safranski (tracks: 2-13,2-14), Gene Cherico (tracks: 2-1 to 2-12), Oscar Pettiford (tracks: 1-18 to 1-20), Paul Chambers (3) (tracks: 1-9 to 1-17), Ray Brown (tracks: 1-1 to 1-8)
Drums – Ed Thigpen (tracks: 1-9 to 1-20, 2-13, 2-14), J.C. Heard (tracks: 1-1 to 1-8), Jack Hanna (tracks: 2-1 to 2-12)
Guitar – Herb Ellis (tracks: 1-1 to 1-8)
Piano – Toshiko Akiyoshi
Sources CD1:
Tracks #1-8, from the album “Toshiko’s Piano” (Norgran MGN 22)
Tracks #9-17, from the album “George Wein Presents Toshiko” (Storyville STLP 912)
Tracks #18-20, taken from the album “Toshiko, Her Trio Her Quartet” (Storyville STLP 918)
Sources CD2:
Tracks #1-4, from the album “Toshiko and the Leon Sash Quartet at Newport”
(Verve MG V 8236)
Tracks #6-12, from the album “The Many Sides of Toshiko” (Verve MGV-8273)
Tracks #13 & 14, from NBC TV-show “The Subject Is Jazz”
All above mp3’s are @192 and are also available on most streamers.
For the two albums (@320) below go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/wUmap8vr
Toshiko - Her Trio, Her Quartet (1957)
1. Kelo
2. Salute To Shorty
3. Pea, Bee And Lee
4. Taking A Chance On Love
5. All The Things You Are
6. No Moon At All
7. I'll Remember April
8. Thou Swell
9. Introduction*
Toshiko and her International Jazz Sextet -United Notions (1958 Metro Jazz)
10. Broadway
11. Sukiyaki
12. Swingin' Till The Girls Come Home
13. United Notions
14. Civilized Folk
15. Strike Up The Band
16. Jane
Cannot find any information regarding track 9 which was added to the playlist by original uploader @ Buffalo Tones blog.
For “ Toshiko Akiyoshi-Lew Tabackin Big Band – Road Time (1977 RCA)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/bkRKwGgC
1. Tuning Up 16:48
2. Warning: Success May Be Hazardous To Your Health 7:33
3. Henpecked Old Man 22:54
4. Soliloquy 8:37
5. Kogun 10:40
6. Since Perry / Yet Another Tear 13:46
7. Road Time Shuffle 6:34
Recorded live in Japan in January & February of 1976.
For “Toshiko Akiyoshi – Finesse (1978 Concord) (@320)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/nuTSpBzA
1. Count Your Blessings 4:58
2. American Ballad 5:45
3. Love Letters 5:06
4. Wouldn't It Be Loverly 5:31
5. Mr. Jelly Lord 6:00
6. Warning!! Success May Be Hazardous To Your Health 3:16
7. You Go To My Head 5:47
8. Solvejg's Song (From Peer Gynt Suite) 6:50
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